Daniel Casper von Lohenstein (1635-1683) is among the most important German Baroque writers. He was once a legal professional, envoy and Imperial Councillor who wrote quite a few complicated tragedies, with his major paintings, the large-scale but unfinished novel Arminius, that's considered as a key novel at the social and political state of affairs within the German Empire after the Thirty Years' battle.

Marie-Therese d'Alverny committed a wide a part of her study to learning and describing manuscripts of clinical texts, specially these translated from Arabic. This quantity comprises these of d'Alverny's stories dedicated to the Latin transmission of the works of alternative Greek and Arabic authors (Aristotle, Galen, Priscianus Lydus, al-Kindi, Albumasar, Algazel and Averroes), the authors answerable for this transmission (Scotus Eriugena, Raymond of Marseilles, Petrus Hispanus, Henri Bate of Malines and Pietro d'Abano), and a few of the subjects of the transmitted texts (astrology and the planetary approach of Herclides), in addition to 3 articles summarizing the entire transmission strategy.